Not to be a wet blanket or anything, but it is nearly impossible for a normal person to become hypoglycemic. When glucose levels fall in the blood, insulin levels go down, and glucagon and epinephrine go up. The net effect is to stimulate the liver to break down glycogen (the long term storage form of glucose and also to synthesize new glucose from fat. The brain cannot survive without glucose, and so it releases neurotransmitters and hormones to tightly regulate circulating glucose.
Patients with diabetes can (and frequently do) become hypoglycemic, usually owing to not eating while taking long acting insulin (which drives sugar levels down) or long acting oral medications that also lower circulating glucose.
What you describe, “the shakes”, is most likely the effect of circulating epinephrine, which, while stimulating glycogenolysis (breakdown of glycogen) and gluconeogenesis (synthesis of new glucose from “scratch”), also cause things like palpitations and “shakes”. I should add that your reaction likely has no long term consequences. That said, you might want to have your sugar checked, just to be on the safe side.